Truck drivers are taking the centre stage in the regional fight against Covid-19 in East Africa
By The Citizen Reporters
Arusha/Dar — Truck
drivers are taking the centre stage in the regional fight against
Covid-19 in East Africa as restrictions on their movements are met with
protests.
Until yesterday,
the number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in Tanzania had reached 306 after
seven
more people tested positive for the coronavirus in Zanzibar.
In Kenya, the number rose to 374 yesterday after 11 more people tested positive.
In Rwanda, the
number of cases rose to 207 on Monday after 16 more people tested
positive, while in Uganda the number of cases remained unchanged at 79,
including several truck drivers from Tanzania and Kenya.
Trucking companies
have appealed for urgent interventions by the governments as transport
across some borders points turned chaotic, impacting the smooth flow of
business.
For Tanzanian
transporters, the crisis is more pronounced at the Mutukula and Rusumo
border posts with Uganda and Rwanda, respectively.
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Scores of lorry
drivers have been sent back home from Uganda upon testing positive for
the coronavirus, while Rwanda has just imposed a restriction requiring
loaded trucks to be off-loaded at Rusumo.
The situation is
more chaotic at the Kenya/Uganda border. Hundreds of trucks carrying
goods have been stopped to enter the latter country for fear of
spreading the virus.
Landlocked Uganda
has put the entire country under a lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic
with nearly 1,000 reported cases across the East African Community
(EAC) region.
Ugandan authorities
want drivers of lorries from Kenya and Tanzania transporting goods
there to hand over the vehicles to their Uganda counterparts to complete
the journey.
"The move besides
adding to the cost of doing business, will impact negatively on movement
of goods," lamented Ms Mercy Ireri, the chief operating officer of
Kenya Transporters' Association.
TV images from
Monday night showed hundreds of lorries carrying goods to Uganda through
the Malaba and Busia border posts stranded amid rising protests.
On Monday, 14 truck
drivers - eight Tanzanians and six Kenyans - who had tested positive
for the coronavirus were returned to their respective home countries.
Incidentally,
Uganda has lower cases of confirmed Covid -19 cases (79) compared to its
neighbours and has reported no death to date, according to government
sources.
Until yesterday
there was no official protest from either government or business
community in Tanzania on restrictions against the country's drivers
ferrying goods to Uganda.
But the Federation
of East African Freight Forwarders Association (FEAFFA) has expressed
its concern as to why Tanzanian transporters are denied easy entry to
some EA states, notably Rwanda.
The body is
preparing a proposal on how to address the crisis and would be submitted
to the EAC Secretariat for action on how to minimize the cost
implications.
The association
raised the issue following last week's notification by the Rwanda
Revenue Authority (RRA) that goods destined there from Tanzania would be
off loaded at Rusumo border post.
The letter sent on
April 24th was addressed to the clearing agents, shippers, transporters,
importers, warehouses operators, exporters and the public.
The Rwanda taxman
maintains that the measure was taken as part of collective efforts to
fight the spread of Covid-19 and that the restriction was to be enforced
from last Monday.
The Tanzania
Freight Forwarders Association (Taffa) says the body has received a
similar directive for transporters ferrying goods to Zambia, another
land locked country.
"This has prompted
us to conduct an emergency meeting to call for harmonization of the
decision," said Edward Urio, the association's president.
Tanzania truck
drivers use the Mutukula and Rusumo two border posts also to ferry goods
destined for South Sudan, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC).
For its part, the
Tanzania Truck Owners Association (Tatoa) through its chief executive
Octavian Kivyiro appealed for the government's intervention on the
matter.
"We are aware about
the Rwanda concern. It wants us to have two drivers and all our cargo
and conveyors offloaded at the customs point of entry.
"As transporters,
it will be expensive. We will incur a lot of costs and loss of cargo
during transportation," he told The Citizen.
Mr Kivyiro said the problem started when some Tanzanian truck drivers tested Covid-19 positive.
Reached for
comment, Works, Transport and Communication minister Isack Kamwele said
he had instructed senior officials of the ministry to follow up,
insisting that Tanzania was ready for dialogue with its neighbours on
the issue.
Reported by Zephania Ubwani (Arusha) and Rosemary Mirondo and Hellen Nachilongo in Dar es Salaam
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